On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, Venkatram Tummala wrote:

> Compound Page is a page which has greater size than the system-wide
> page size. Compound pages are mainly used by HugeTLB code. In some
> architectures, multiple page sizes are supported. For Ex. x86_64
> also supports 2 MB also in addition to 4KB pages which is the
> default setting when you compile a kernel.  So, on a kernel
> configured with 4KB page size, if you do a alloc_pages (..) of say
> order 9, you will have a total 2MB worth of pages. As the
> architecture supports 2MB page sizes, basically one TLB entry is
> enough for 2MB worth of memory instead of 512 entries, if HugeTLB is
> used.

  ok, that makes sense.  and i'm assuming that 2MB worth of pages
doesn't need to live on a 2MB boundary.

  also, as i read it, compound pages is the normal situation, given
this test in <linux/page-flags.h>:

  #ifdef CONFIG_PAGEFLAGS_EXTENDED
        PG_head,                /* A head page */
        PG_tail,                /* A tail page */
  #else
        PG_compound,            /* A compound page */
  #endif

so if there *aren't* extended page flags, you get the standard
support of compound pages which (i'm assuming as i haven't gone back
to check yet) has all the pages in a compound page share flags.

  but if you have extended page flags, then each of those pages can
have their own page flag setting, does that make sense?  i suspect it
will all be clear when i go back and look again.

> So, the way it works on a 4KB page size kernel is you get the
> following : HTTTTTT.......T (total of 512) . 'H' indicating a head
> page & 'T' indicating a tail page. For a tail page, the 'first_page'
> field of 'struct page' will point to the head page. This 2 MB worh
> of memory will be treated as a single page conceptually. What that
> means, the refcounts on these individual 512 4K pages are equal.
> They are equal to the refcount of the head page. Everytime, you get
> a ref on a page, the refcount on the head page is modified.  If you
> have support for extended page flags, these flags can be used to
> indicate whether a given page is a head page or a tail page. Thats
> all there's to it.

  ok, i'll puzzle this out in a bit, thanks.

rday

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Robert P. J. Day                               Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA
                        http://crashcourse.ca

Twitter:                                       http://twitter.com/rpjday
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